June 4th, 2008
TTC.ca beta site to be previewed tomorrow
Posted by Matthew Blackett

A year and a half ago, Spacing teamed up with Reading Toronto, BlogTO and Torontoist to gather ideas from our readers on how the TTC could improve its web site. Our efforts resulted in the TTC soliciting a much more robust Request For Proposal (RFP) that addressed a number of our concerns. This online discussion became a focal point at the inaugural Transit Camp in the spring of 2007, and continued to be a hot topic at the recent Metronauts conference (Transit Camp’s latest incarnation).
On Thursday, the media will get a sneak peak at the TTC’s new beta web site. Staff has been playing their cards close to their chest so we have no idea what to expect. A report from Spacing will follow on Friday.








Comments
12 comments | Leave a comment
Neither the author nor Spacing necessarily agree with the comments posted below.
Spacing reserves the right to edit or delete comments entirely. See our Comment Policy.
Your screenshot looks just different enough from how ttc.ca looks in my browser that I thought it was the sneak preview of the new site! That led to a split second of sheer horror.
Comment by Matt L.
June 4, 2008 @ 6:38 pm
Matt, I had the same reaction. Scary stuff…
Comment by David Harrison
June 4, 2008 @ 7:03 pm
Now lets make the City of Toronto website better too.
Comment by scott d
June 4, 2008 @ 7:21 pm
I’m so excited for this! It can’t possibly be any worse than it is now, so no matter what they did it will be an improvement.
I really, really hope for easier ways to look up how to get from A to B, but even if it was just less ugly it would be an awesome first step.
Comment by Eva
June 4, 2008 @ 9:22 pm
Design-wise, there is no possible way of being worse than the old site. I just hope they test it on a range of browsers.
Comment by James
June 4, 2008 @ 9:27 pm
I’m going to let Joe Clark tell me what to think about it
Comment by Mark Dowling
June 5, 2008 @ 9:05 am
I just hope that whatever is presented, the design (not just the contents) will be up on a regular basis.
Comment by W. K. Lis
June 5, 2008 @ 11:04 am
It might edify if commenters could sign off with examples of existing transit websites they like…
http://ratp.fr/
http://www.tfl.gov.uk/
Comment by Ed Drass
June 5, 2008 @ 11:13 am
The beta website is up for public review. It looks pretty non flashy, but DO go through the new schedule pages. That’s probably the only significant improvement I’ve yet to find
http://www.beta.ttc.ca
Comment by Laurence
June 5, 2008 @ 3:48 pm
Well, I’m glum about it. The TTC should never have gotten into this business. They’re not a media company. They shouldn’t try to be. Rather, they should put the money into freeing the data.
Improve the underlying information infrastructure so that every last bit of useful data is published in a standards-compliant manner. Use whatever’s left over from the one-true-Web-site budget to launch a contest — or, hell, pay a few developers to come up with useful tools, if they really think noone would bite.
This Web site redesign short-term gain for long-term, well, nothing. Even our academic friends are now making this point. (Hey, Ed — Princeton! They’re legit! Now you can put it in your column!) Eventually the TTC will get it, too. In the meantime we have … well, a Web site redesign.
Comment by Disparishun
June 5, 2008 @ 3:49 pm
… and, in case it wasn’t obvious, please, let’s not start by making the City of Toronto Web site better. Let’s start by them getting their information out there. Um, let a thousand Web sites bloom?
Comment by Disparishun
June 5, 2008 @ 3:50 pm
Anyone know who did the redesign?
Comment by Corby Fine
June 6, 2008 @ 11:02 am
Leave a comment